Broadway Is Back! And So Are We! Barely!
And we would have missed the show , but for a little magic!
I recently did a full immersion Broadway Spring Break Weekend with a dear friend. Our group trip was organized by Custom Travel Insider for Broadway Across America, and the clear message was “Broadway is Back”! But everything about our trip was touched in some way by Covid 19, from flights, to restaurants to rules inside the theaters.
Starting with extensive delays to our 40 minute “shuttle flight” from Boston to NYC, because of weather and uneven staffing levels due to Covid 19, we waited more than two and half hours to depart, boarded, were held at the gate because LaGuardia airport closed to new departures. No sweat we thought…we had planned a 6 hour buffer between our flight time and our first tour activity. The doors closed again and we headed out to the tarmac, only to be told again that for safety, LaGuardia had closed, and we sat watching our 6 hour buffer between flight and 7 PM curtain melt away. Finally after 5 PM we were able to take off and arrived at 6 PM. Mentally, we began regrouping, knowing we’d miss a dinner, hoping we could still make curtain for our shoe Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, but that it would take a bit of magic straight out of Hogwarts to make it happen!
Fortunately, Custom Travel Insider had provided a driver who was waiting for us when we left the airport, we grabbed our carry on bags,dahsed through the crowds of delayed passengers waiting to board, and ran in the rain to find the driver and explained our predicament. It was 6:10 PM and we had to get to Midtown Manhattan, on a rainy evening…at rush hour. No sweat, right? We would need to check in at the hotel to pick up the tickets left for us by Larry at Custom Travel. My GPS said 56 minutes, we had only 50 minutes, but maybe we could “Apparate”?
Our driver did everything short of waving a wand to get us about a half a block away from the hotel at 6:45! He explained if he dropped us at the door, it was another 20 minute drive around the gridlocked block. He pulled to the curb and suggested we jump out and make a run for the hotel. Did I mention it was pouring rain?!
We made a run for the hotel, dodging puddles and umbrella toting New Yorkers. After a day of terrible travel luck, the front desk was empty with a concierge just waiting to check us in, grab our bags to bring to the room and hand off our Harry Potter tickets. “Run!” He told us, “you can make it! It’s half a block! “ And run we did, arriving at the entrance of the Lyric theater with just enough time to run to the Ladies room as they called “five minutes to showtime” over the PA.
Luckily for us, (other than more flight delays to return home!) the rest of our Broadway trip went off without a hitch thanks to the hard work of Larry and Paige at CTI and the lively and engaged group of fellow travelers from all over the country.
Our trip included, airfare, (or credit) transfers, 3 nights hotel in the heart of Broadway, two group meals, and a special NYC tour. The package included three tickets per person to top Broadway shows from a selection of top shows, and we had excellent seats for each show we selected.
The special events and meals organized by CTI really was the icing on the cake On the morning of our first day in town, we selected a walking tour of Broadway theaters led by the owner and founder of Broadway Up Close, Tim Dolan. Tim’s unique Broadway Beginnings Tour, took us to the oldest theaters in Broadway and was chock full of entertaining and well researched tales of the theaters and their eccentric owners, stars and the occasional ghost!
Tim’s unique business model is also a project to help employ actors between jobs to lead tours and make hand crafted souvenirs that they sell at their kiosk right in Times Square by the TKTS booth. These tours and making and selling souvenirs kept many actors afloat while they waited for theaters to open again after Covid 19 closures. Most of what you can buy in NYC as souvenirs are made in China, so even if you don’t take a tour, check out their kiosk for locally made souvenirs!
Another unique event was lunch at Carmines where we were treated to a 4 course family style luncheon of salads, pastas, meat, fish and desserts and the opportunity to have a Q&A with two working actors on Broadway Shows.
We had a lively discussion with Sheldon Henry of the Tina cast and Oge Agulue of the HP and the Cursed Child cast, about life as a Broadway actor. They shared the level of professionalism required of most of the actors (many who have BFA’s and MFA’s) and the physical challenges of doing eight shows a week!
Our actors described their important roles as “swings” -the actors who do not appear regularly, but have to be prepared to substitute for any of several roles for an actor who misses a show. These swing actors are onstage now more than ever because of Covid 19. With regular testing, many of the actors will test positive for Covid 19 and have to stay out for almost a week. Every Playbill we received for our shows had at least one “swing” actor listed, and they’ve been described as the “unsung heros” of Broadway’s reopening. However, be prepared that shows with big stars or multiple infections in the cast could close entirely for a few days. For instance Sarah Jessica Parker and Matthew Broderick’s Plaza was closed during out visit due to Covid 19. My advice: if you have your heart set in a big star, buy your tickets last minute, if you can. But is also important to remember that with the professionalism of the casts of most ensemble shows, you would hardly notice whether there has been a substitution, and it won’t affect your experience!
As for our experience INSIDE the theaters, we were notified well in advance that the current rules required
proof of full vaccination, card or electronic
photo identification to prove you match your vaccine card
masking inside the theater except for taking a sip or bite. employees with “mask up” signs will monitor this, and we saw nearly 100% compliance, although some small percentage of folks lower their masks during the show.
Of course, rules can change at any time, so always read the information provided with your ticket or package purchase.
As for dining, NYC had relaxed vaccination requirements and masking while we were visiting, not requiring either. We were able to make several reservations on Open Table during our early April trip, and this allowed us to dine at quiet times before or after a show and the big dinner rush.
What we learned during our trip to Broadway was that while Covid 19 has changed some of the rules and the ways theaters work, Broadway is back, and it’s wonderful to be gathering with others to experience live theater again!
Article and Photos by Kathleen Klofft
A Three Dog Day In Yellowstone!
A Wolf Photo Safari in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem in Winter
Warning: This post contains graphic images of animals killing and eating other animals in the wild
The pressure was on! But in the end it was just a bit of good luck and my comfort with my high powered binoculars that had me be the first person in our group to spot wolves in the wild! When our group of 8 travelers with Natural Habitat Adventures Yellowstone Wolf Quest Photo Adventure completed our rapid covid tests and met for dinner, our guides Kurt Johnson and Jonathan Long asked everyone to share one interesting thing about themselves. Jeff decided he should share that I am particularly good at spotting wildlife.
Natural Habitat’s written departure materials for our early March trip to spot and photograph wolves and other wildlife in Yellowstone against a winter backdrop were very clear…animals are not always spotted and if they are, it’s often at a great distance.
We left from Bozeman MT to enter the park at the only open entrance in winter, the North Entrance, near the town of Gardiner, near the Mammoth Hot Springs. Our plan was to traverse the northern road of the park over the next 5 days, staying 2 days in Cooke City and 2 days in Gardiner, while tracking wolves and other wildlife from Natural Habitat’s purpose built specialized vans in Yellowstone. Nat Hab also has access to the Department of Interior’s Yellowstone Wolf Project (YWP) staff radio communications.
The YWP uses collars and telemetry, as well as planes and eyewitnesses, to monitor the activities and health of the wolves which were once eliminated from the area by hunting and were restored to Yellowstone in 1995 amid ongoing controversy. In Yellowstone there are are dozens of wolf project NPS employees, volunteers and other researchers who have “wolf radios” as did our guides. These channels are not shared publicly to avoid hunters tracking wolves to park borders in hopes to legally hunt them if they move outside the park.
We had barely entered the park, with high hopes, low expectations, and very little experience in the landscape, but we never could have expected what happened next! The radios were quiet when we arrived at this site, called Hell Roaring Creek, just to see the “scenery”. Our guide Jon said, “always scan to see if you see anything” and of course, that’s what I was doing.
Suddenly, I saw what I thought was wolves trotting in a perfect line down the snow pack. Of course, I’d only been in the park an hour, and needed to be sure I wasn't seeing some of the thousands of bison that roam the park. But then I excitedly started counting the number of wolves I was seeing and sharing landmarks for others to train cameras and spotting scopes on them. In an instant the wolf radio was crackling with excitement and researchers and guides with more experience were following this large pack moving quickly through into the trees.
Video Below provided by NHA Guides
As the wolves moved quickly, we lost them into a copse of trees that made spotting them impossible.
Soon a researcher noticed the wolves emerge into view again, and was excitedly noting they had pulled down a bull elk! They believed this to be the so-called Rescue Pack of 12 animals, researchers there were moving their scopes, struggling to get a view at great distance and with shrubs and trees blocking the view. The radio crackled with the news and more wolf watchers, staff and volunteers, as well as another wolf tour group, was crowding the overlook to the kill sight in minutes! I’m sure one of those pros would have spotted them eventually, but the fact that I was the first was amazing for me! What we couldn’t have known when we first spotted them, was that they were actively hunting.
As exciting as it was to witness this, it was also emotionally difficult to watch. We all quickly realized how harsh life is in the natural world, where the winter environment adds more complexity to the challenging environment. It’s rare for wolves to take down a bull elk. Because of it’s huge antlers, they can’t take it by the throat and suffocate it immediately by crushing the windpipe, the way they would a cow elk. Instead they grab it by the back legs (called “hamstringing”) till it’s down then rip open it’s flank and start eating it before it’s even passed.
We saw in the scope. the elk try to lift its head and attempt to get up for a few minutes before it finally passed. It was no match for a carefully coordinated attack by a dozen wolves! It was the most brutal thing I’ve ever seen in real life. But also it was amazing to witness these powerful animals at work surviving in incredibly harsh conditions.
The following is a time lapsed (edited) of the pack at the kill site, that video our guides were able to capture on their phone via Bluetooth from the spotting scope. Be warned that although it’s at quite a distance away, it is a brutal scene, and quite graphic. We were provided a unique opportunity to watch this pack of wolves hunt and take down an animal they need for their survival.
Video Below Provided by Natural Habitat Adventures Guides
Some of the interesting things to watch in this video is how some lower ranked wolves are not allowed to eat from the elk until the more senior ranking wolves have had their fill. Those beta wolves can be seen guarding the kill site, and early on forcing the elk’s head back down. Later in the video, some wolves have had their fill, and you’ll see them roll in the snow to wash off the blood and rest. Some of the beta wolves will approach the alphas, as a puppy would. licking their faces. Also you’ll notice that many other predators will begin approaching the kill site, waiting for their turn. You can see magpies in this video.
For the next 3 days a researcher was working that Hell Roaring Stream kill site to see what other animals benefit from the kill after the wolves have finished with it. Later in the day we saw, golden eagles, bald eagles and magpies working on the carcass to get food.
Shortly after the amazing wolf pack kill sighting, or guides joked that we may have had the highlight of our trip in the first hours…and while we didn’t get to see wolves this close or engaged in behavior this dramatic for the rest of the trip, we were able to experience Yellowstone and many more of the animals that live there in the winter.
On our way to Cooke City, we found a coyote eating from a mule deer carcass believed to have been brought down, possibly by a different pack of wolves earlier in the day. Spotting these raptors and other carnivores, such as this raven, waiting nearby is often a sign that the wolves have hunted and killed something.
To complete the trifecta and make it a “three dog day”, we spotted a fox on the side of the road on our way to Cooke City. Although he was too elusive to photograph from the moving van, he did show up later (or a friend?) to beg for scraps at a bakery in Cooke City and was happy to pose for our group.
In addition to our three dog day, mother nature had one more little predator for us to see! We were scheduled to end our day in Silver Gate with a discussion and slide show with Yellowstone photographer and National Geographic contributor, Dan Hartman. When we arrived, Dan greeted us enthusiastically in his driveway, excited we’d arrived in time to see a Northern Pygmy Owl who had just captured a Gray Crowned Rosy Finch almost his owns size and was eating it in the tree near Dan’s gallery. We all clambered out into nearly hip deep snow to see one last predator at work before the light faded on our three dog day.
Photos and video by Jeff and Kathy Klofft; except where noted